thegreekdog wrote: Woodruff wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Woodruff wrote:Lootifer wrote:The only thing I take issue with on your first chart is the title: they immediately equate having a degree to being smart. I see dumb people with degrees all the time

Agreed. To me, a degree shows important things, such as a willingness to work to get where you want to be and perhaps being goal-oriented (although that could be questioned). But it doesn't so much equate to being intelligent.
More and more it has to do with being fortunate enough to live in the right area, one where you get funding and support. It also has a lot to do with "rule following", which too often is diametrically the opposite of real thinking.
I agree with the suggestion about rule-following (and I don't think that's necessarily a bad thing, from a hiring perspective). I don't agree with the idea of it being "luck". Not these days when there are so many scholarships available that are not even being used.
Yeah, like the ones for single mothers with kids... if you are married, need not apply. (PLENTY of those) Or, the ones for an American of Armenian dissent studying astronomic engineering. Oh, yeah, and a few for those poor illegal aliens who don't qualify for other types of assistance.
The rest of the "aid" is loans, and fewer and fewer degrees result in a career that make paying those loans back practical, particularly if you are not young and just starting out.
thegreekdog wrote:From Player's perspective, if you are successful it mostly has to do with luck (or being born with money... which, technically, is also luck).
Not just "my perspective", sorry to break your illusions.
If you ask most people why they are successful, they inevitably say "hard work, dedication", and so forth. BUT, if you really track why people get the jobs they get and opportunities they get, it really heavily depends on who they know. This operates directly -- if you are not in the "right network", you just don't hear about most jobs. You go to an interview and if you can chat about baseball or your fraternity or whatever, you have a connection that will make your other qualifications just seem more amenable. It also happens indirectly, as the "right" connections mean you have the "right manners", know the clubs to join, the right wording for your resumes, etc, etc, etc.
I will track down the studies, even though I doubt you will actually read them .